Funding for the digitization of this title was provided by R.J. Taylor, Jr. Foundation.
About The People's advocate. (Crawfordville, Ga.) 1892-1893 | View Entire Issue (March 23, 1893)
The People's Advocate. VOL. 1 -AT AI^.1- 1IX >U1 —AT 2HE DELMONICO! F. s. uarniiart & CO. Gieemeborc, Ga. | Items of Interest Gathereil Here ami There, CITY ITEMS OF INTEREST Tlieee Who Visit, Get Sick. Have an Accident, and who Always Love To Bn i’mr Hindi print. Mr. A. D. McDonald visited Augusta Nuuday last. Rev R. E, Lee Harris tilled his regular appointment at Jewels, Ga. on Sunday last. Rev. Dr. J 0. Gibson preached at the Baptist church on Wednesday night last. /fev, G. U. Guitn ol Siloam, visited liis parents here Saturday uad Sunday last. Miss'Alla lleid one of Crawfordville’s most chartuiog young ladies is visiting her luntlicr this week. Mrs. A. J. Melton of Augusta, n ec Mist Inez Smith is visiting friends aud relatives iu Crawfordvilie this week. Miss Lilia Norton who is assistant teah er of thj school at Siloam visite 1 her {larcuts^iu Crawfordvito Saturday and SrfiryTsst Send to B. C. Holmes 21 E Ala. St. At Dnta Geo lor circular of his Improved Farm Level Ecli|>»e. Now is the time to save you^land by Terracing. Prepare yourself for the eotniug summer by cleansing your system aud purifying JoUt blood wit* l’hfntatiou Sarsaparilla and lcddic of l'cjash. I rice COcts aud $1.00 pur bottle, Dr. Berms one of Oawfordvlle'a most popular physicians, visited Atlanta ou business thin w.ek. Editor Smith of the Advocate, pa ! d a visit to Union Point Sunday ia#t. Dotit forget that you can gut the Peo¬ ples Party Paper ami the Peoples Advig cate -uie year for $1.60. Hive you tried pDtation Liver Pill* foj habitual caustijiation^ They are perfect¬ ly delightful and a sure cure. Price g.'icts. Plantation Chid Cure is guaranteed. If if it debt cure go anil get your money lack. Ask your merchant about it Price fiOcts. Plantrtion chill Cu*e stojis chills, stojis ’em quick, and they never come back. If you dont believe it, try it. If it dont stop ’em ask for your mouey back, you’ll get it. Price fiOcts. Go to T- B. ltice for the genuiue Buist’s garden seed. Cal! on roe when in town court week and get what you want iu the line of gar dan seed. T. B- Rice When spring time comes and you feel tired, lazy and generally no account. Dent blame the weather. But cleanse your blood with Plantation Sarsaparilla, and start your liver with Plantation Dills, aud begin life anew with the rest of nature. The county school commissioners met last Saturday and transacted some busi¬ ness the details of which we are not pre¬ pared to give our readers. We are sorry to learn that Mrs Neal on, mother of J. M. Nealon of this place who has bean tick for some time, died on Sat¬ urday last. Mr.Nealon has the Advo¬ cate's deepest sympathies. There will be a lecture at the Method tist church on text Sunday by Rev. Mr. Belle, a < hinaman for the benefit o* foreign Missionaries. A large crowd shouid *t end and help out this praise worthy Dumb Chill; Ague: Congestive Chill; Death. This is the evoluttiti<>n of that malaria! chilly segsatiao. .Stop it in time P.antfetion Chill Cure will do it, or it will c at you nothing. ORAWFOllDVILLE. GA., MARCH 20, 18!):’>. £ NICE LETTER Our Northern Friend Gives Us Some More Information. Ellicottville N. V. Mar. 12th. 1893 Manager Advocate; Crawfordville, Ga. My Dear Sir; Ever since Feb. 19tli until the 10iu»r, l was constantly absent it our county seat attending the term of Supreme Court except two week days and the Sundays: and how I take my line to reply to your letter of the 19 dt, and thauk you for the welcome gift jf your picture. 1 could tell that it is a picture of a printer boy at first sight, although you have grown aud changed very much. 1 return the compliment and send you my photo which is tolerable, but taken too light. 1 am “at home" in a printing office and printers are my special favorites, except, of late, the capitalist sharks of the “Assd. Press,” who are to-day the wor-t enemies of the true detnocsacy, that “Tom ’ rsou founded aud Ste¬ phen O rover Cleveland misrepresents. Mj brother, De lPitt C. [fa her of Ellen, my orphan neice who was too when both her father and mother died remember either ) was a bright thorough ambitious printer of Milwaukee, Wis, aud killed liimsalf by over work at the age of 25 years. He was Secretaij of the i/il waukce Typographical Union and at the first prominent national convention printers held iu Cleveland, Ohio, iu 1802 was the Milwaukee delegate, aud young¬ est of all the delegates and received the title of “the Boy Delegate.’' ID and 1 were devoted aud inseparable, and my devotion to printers in general; and I can say that 1 am u favorite of the ters. Duriug my grsduating terra at Conn, Literary Institution in 1802, I taut lor to go to Milwaukee aud take position of chief editor of one of the lies there. 1 would Uot leave at such time, yet i tbsu made the one great take of my life. My fourth boy is named De Witt after my brother, and for a der he alone of iuy hoys, closely him in all ways aud looks aud there is i»o boy here anj where near his sup. and age. that can matejt him, aud he is a boy alter my own heart, As he has just hai Ins photo taken, l also send you one of him. He is 14 years o.d, Feb. 11 ult. I know all the hard roads that a poor boy has to travol iu life. I went for myself, out of a good poor mans home while in my teens lor my father was a mechanic a. is yours. 1 worked very hard seven years iu a tannery and mill, two years iu a machine shop, much on farms, aud much as a day laborer. I have seen all the hardships of |»overty aud early, learded to Imte that nedless condition of life estab liahi'd by unjust conditions wherein tiros; who create woaltb ore robbed of ^the pro¬ duct of their toil by the drones who do not create any wealth at all, as an excuse for tbair baneful existence. But during all those hard years, 1 improved, zealousy, nearly every spare moment by systematic study, nights, rainy day and Sunday, es¬ pecially, thoroughly learning the German language without a teacher save six days. 1 then got aide to teach winter terms ol school, and thenceforward my task grew more and more eaay Then 1 taught school i n winter and went to High School summers, working on farms su haying and harvesting duriug summer vacations. When 1 first applied tor admission to the “Greene High School,’’ tha principal re¬ fused to receive me saying that “that ail of the classes were too far advanced for me and therefore there was no class to put me in. I replied. “I can keep up!” He smiled at my presumption and said; “young man you dual know what you aro talking about.” 1 persisted and he tried the erperimeul of taking me into school. Toward the end of the second year, his health failed and he finally had to quit entirely, and I had the honor an l satis¬ faction of being called out of the ranks by him to fill his place, and 1 did so the last two weeks before he finally gave up. Theu I went hack to Old Conn, my na¬ tive slate, to the Bonn. Lit. In»t., was ex¬ am iued, took my place in the senior class, and gardaated, taking the highest reports every month except one. in 1864 over the heads of 20 applicants, who were college graduates, hut I could uot accept because I bad li.rd out to manage the Big Land Office tore, at the same time read¬ ing iaw, where 1 came a stranger as principal of the village school in a 1853. My brother, De AVitt, at the ags of 17 having iearnod his trade of printer, went to Wisconsin, (ever westward flows the tide of rieu ar,d progress,| to start out in life f*.r himself. Po,r De Witt, poor De Witt how offen have / sai l. All tba* things I say to you, not to boast, nor to draw invidious distinction* but to siiow to you, {•ersouaUy, how to travel out {-,v-rty to material indepen knee, yankee A PAPER OF. FOR. AND BY THE PEOPLE. )» fashion, while at the same time, wo both labor to make the road easier for other to travel, by never euding war on unjust conditions of the present social system which is rapidly leducibg this land of the free and home of the brave, to the awlul condition of Europe, where lie who is boru poor may know that he and all his pri>s terity will die poor. 1 wish that every young mao who really desired to live a go.si aud useful life, would do just what j dill the year Before 1 became a voter. /determined to read and think ior myselt aud I devoured the history of this country from the begiaing. Of all the writings the views of .1 wile, sou ,ciiptivated me, aud I was unsophisticated euouglr to suppose that the Democratic party of modern times was the Democratic party of JethwsoD. Against the earnest {trotest of my lather who from being a Douglas Democrat had become a republican, 1 voted for tire first a democratic ticket in 18S d , for Douglas and Johnson, and ever since until 1878, I always voted the Democratic ticket, and because 1 am an absolute v free trader 1 vo tea th*t ticket in 1881, for the last time on earth. In 1876. I attended every thing from town caucus to the Democrat National Convention iu St Lous Mo and stumped this county for the Dent, ticket night aud day followed uigtrt after night with enthusiastic soldier boys with torch¬ es trampling the bloody shirt into the mild and mire ol oblivion. In that cam paign, I fully discoved the utter rotteuess ut tire modern Dent, machine, and the sordid soulless charactered that tax-shirker aud railroad wrecker, Sam Tilden, Cleve¬ lands political god-father both ol whom I knew peiaonully. Tilden was uommated by fraud and bribes. 1 left St Louie the night before iu disgust having Ira’crnized with the southern delegates, particularly those from l-ommiua, who with me wan¬ ted to commence the Second Century wi.h a lineal decendcut of Johu Hancock, after whom 1 named my second boy and not with such a wall street coward es Tilden. I still have nty white sik badge that Gen Jim Steadman printed on my coat delo- at the Head (Juarers of the Louisiauna sntiou * - |n 1876. I got in a contro witb o BUrcye .i K „ddess” Watterson crtfwd tu »*>»« '« t*»' Ho|e , whicb cuded by makillg ,{,{, proph . u bin Y oucango on and uomi n(ltb Tildel , but matk my words he will Dever rake his seat as president of tlieee UnjUMj gutiB but 5f Hancock be nomins |#d bo w|1 , 1>e elected , nd no power can kwp bim „ uto f his seat. Did n.y proph Kf colue tru _/ Capital is tim'd, It ,,4. to comlTia nd ami control the brave, The CyWar j ^p^iut r.ldeu the thimble fj . J „ oliUcilin , nd conspirator sought # yic y , brouJ , h U|0 Mttn * Ild c ;ght but h# h#d U) fRC(J Zick chandler who pos ^--i equal ou i,tlerty aud endless sand. as we here iu the oil country say 'lilden was as he deserved dished, aud Hayes, for the south aud for the whole country gave us one o( the best administrations tho na¬ tion has had, While Tilden cheated the nation out of his income tax, that the Peo¬ ple’s Party is going to restore, and finally Tilden alter writing bis owu will which the courts held to be void died for the gaod of his country rnd to the sorow of wall street. Cleveland bowerer fills h's {dace. The law firm of /.aiming,, Cleveland and Folsom, of Buffalo, was a good deal of a law firm L toning was from this hi* native caimty, and was the b ains of the firm. Years ago I tried a big law suit in Supreme court agaiust Oscar Folsom of that firm, father of J/rs. Cleveland aud the jury disagreed, 10 of ihern being for me and two against. Folsom ait hough at the trial did net try his case for his cli cuts but employed Murry of Dunkirk to try it for lam. L-nning became Attorney the New U.rk.s grsat K. U. mono{»oly the New Yoik canal R. R and when he ^ 8U , Jdea| Cleveland succeeded and to ust that ifiuence he owes his luck and becams the man of destiny which means that under him the destiny of snch mo¬ nopolies looks very favorable and the des - tiny of the honest ‘producing masses for four years more looks dark as night while his own dastiny remains just the rsrae to remain the Figure Head of Waf' treet plutocracy. If you could have b( citb me at court the past three weeks L tear the numerous farmers there talk you would feel enc juroged. Tue J cause ia gaining everywhere the light is driving back the darknaes of political wrong and every young mac who will read and think as 1 did betore he casts bis first ballot will read and thiuk .himself into the P. P. ae genui.ro damocrstic party of Jefferson. My kiodeat regards to all. Your northern friend E. D. Northrop, INOTICK it Alliance Ifir Greene County Farmers wilGhr^et in Greenesboro on the first T|Br uy in April next at 10;40 e clock AMI ti '893. A full attendance is de at oil district Lecturer has been iu viteff t be with ns that day. l|csI J. L. Crosslcy. Pres L lawny Sec. TliJB Al.LlANCF STORE Uu*- the successful management of Mr.’ tv C.Cytpai n; thanks tts p.-rua. lor pa t lavera aml anouncea that.' with new stock and s j prices; its intention to remain oue leading trade oeutors of Craw -#> -1.0 W|ls. See Mr durpmsu’e advertise - - ,r. US lit l^rui goods Jur Jittle niouey am. t v is i cm in rcsimcut. give him s call. - SHERIFF SALES. \k/ ii.:. oe sola, in flout ol lue uour of VY vpc, coUiluouau ui yaiiaierro corlftr t), WUUIU luu lc„ul UWUIS Oi #aie, uu n.t IUm uVruei SUe»Ua> iu. axynir, Icuj, ro tnc niaues. .or cusu, u.o U»J sl.iliiuu it.uios 'f.roca’’ wguca »«#»uvuU)«*fi out wnen moiluii #i#Wu ke, ro.'., Uj mo 1 or met tosn^oA spin county b. l’ltlinau v. oo» Uwii, as U-o p.epsiryy of U. II. lo Mit* ?y t.a execuuou lasuea uour tue superior cbm v Ol swra couiUj wu Jlmcii V , lava Iu I'Hiilm, l,.SbO St ij^auU n a ulUICi u^.ius, swiu upus uw ioieciusuia or u uioi vn ou sithi stwiuou hy #u'a iuio.au id sjut iouiucn a. # aimer uu retr iu#ij y, ou.u piepoivy iu pusses siou ui soul uelcituwui, a# It. iitlmaii w nun ii|l >eu uu. - u. V. Bkxxlky, Sheriff. March 8, leva. * WJ ILL be told in front of the door ut v Y iut ouutluuuse ui laUafurro coun¬ ty, ior uaah, 4gu«»t on me nr«i f\n{^My in April i*o-i *o U> made!, Within (lie legal tiuu.. Jl safe, one Uiowt voroieu mute,tueuti jr e wnc-iiui.v agon i> at on# • / _ i -/ j " .y# CC ds^r.ST dan, a. tM # un, v. ut. R. Daraeu satisfy w />j ecutlun issued f row* superio' t of said county lu la. of 8. J. Film aiust said Darden aud U. il. Mill til. 11. Y. lizacLKT, Sheriff. March s,(1867. A UVD BDSINEDri HOUSE Is the Backet Store owned by Mr A D McDonald. Its proprtetoi is a man too we 11 known lor bis houesty and business push to need introduction' See,his .silver tisemcmt'iu this paper aud wheu you are il, town go to see his goods, You will And them at represented. f NO PICE. Onr local news column ,ol county Slid city new* we are compelled to anorteu cn account of that little trouble mentioned elsewhere A NICE RESTAURANT. Greenesboro was lucky enough to get a nice restaurant which resembles a a citv crij ver> verv rou'-h tuu.u We » would like to impress upon our readers that wnen th ini.y _ v visit Utreeoesboro to be sure and look for tb* “Delmonii a" Messrs F R Barn bart * Co are tb. proprietors a.,1 would be pleased to have you call on mein at any time- Meals at all hours- Do not carry your lunch as you cau get ]ust what, you want-They can bo found at J W Johnsons building next door to tba ps lac a saloon- Give us a call F S Barnhart A Co Ureenenesboro Ga NOl ICE Mr. T. A. Boone who formery managed the office of the Advocate is no longer eon Dec ted in any way with k tbat paper. All subscriptions you may wish to pay and aoa all mr.niv moa«> for advertU*R* must be paid to the editor his authorised ... agent*, or Subscribe for this paper. FARMERS—K. R. MEN. EUGENE V. DEeS SAYS THEIR INTER¬ ESTS ARE IDENTICAL. tin* Editor of Tho I.mmnot 1 v- fire¬ men'# Muga/ tn«* Scorches lae IUIUki) Ajf-llo Also !’«>• Hi a Hriippets to flic .MoutliplJrfi of til© Shy looks. Some tini#s:uco Tho Railway Ago published two addresses, onrf by L. S.. Steadman, and tho other by oxAiovenior Clear, of Iowa, delivered before the Rail¬ way Employees’ club, at Des Moines. We are not specially Interested in what R«itl«nnn said. Our task is to ^ Qf ^ ^ ^ pn§BKaa . j y {^rested j„ the fnrtner, lieinoans his ignorance aud stupidity, his general want of common seiree. the easy,yrity he *» bunkoed, and therefr.ro seefcg’ With easy victim of deception; itsr'yo-'aJy’Ogeh, JJha4*ilu knows orili nary pnp, before quite as mitch ulsmt rtwQt^ads, p< dities, economy and leglulfiOeh a^Tho avt'.Ago farmer, and thnU'nts condition hover Will improve until ho listens to the ad vice given by such gentlemen as Messrs. Steadman ami Gear and drills with the railway employees’ clubs designed to enablo farmers to cut their eyetooth. The Railway Ago editor says: It appear# to be a difficult thing to make I be —tlud public unil»r#t«uid -r.n.i Uia/Arinrr andenitund hestUity politician to the profeSslomil and “Brsnger" Is not liotitllHy to tho farmer. hive A certain seotlon i f tin- funning com¬ munity tor a bruit time Milti-r. il them¬ selves to be hiwnlwlnkvd aud h-I n.Mruy h} iho politician of tho -ocklcas kind, who has no end to Bcrve but Iris personal Inter, Mb. The)' liavo beUevixltn his loud mnellicd oratory at i-lciw ttoi. times and have sained imthlnit by It; the) harunrnl him. to tho t ’liln Iccislaturo again and again, where he has found a Held for Until¬ ing hut the ekhthlHon of Lis own politleal cor¬ ruptness. Tho sock Icon jioUtlcliiii liaa pro Ml I'd no one. Ho liuSuarned nothing for tho farmer. But he has harassed the railways uud. injured the rallany employee. He liasahusned capital and brought discord and distrust Into tho hunt. Seas and economic rolattccs of the country. Ills effort# hal o hooi purely destructive, rmd of the Injury to tho flnauctal welfare w UJch ho tme monght the agricultural Interests ha # had to bear at least their share. Aud ltd# In ail that th. real farmer has recolveU from the (ranger demaifomie. It was qnito nnueceesmy for iterator of Tbs Railway Age to U, an voiousa. Hispsotodto^a^Mat A*s> ^'-.'Isut »ae«| S» way %b t he is charlatans, eg /legion* ass, the .jip viettm ol aeitims to an extent that he require* ihe protection of such benevolent and philanthropic men as own and operate railronda— Jny Gould, for instance—whoso groat hearts aro ceaselessly yearning to resctio farm¬ ers from “demagogues and granger poli ticiRns," bnnko steerors, robbore, wily and oily pi rat..a, who agitato until con¬ gress passes interstate commerce laws, based tqHin the fact that pious, gislly, sublimated railroad presidents and di¬ rectors ct al. should cease their piracies under severe {wnalties. Aud these "demagogues and granger politicians,” tlreso cheats and vulgar tricksters, have so kept lift their agita tion that the representatives of the jm-o pin tn various states have |Mi.ssed laws which railroad magnates say they will not obey if they can help it, and to nc complish their purpose they appeal to their • --Joyces to club together for the p.- A aiding thorn to intimidate the .nuking {.ewers, and tho editor of The Railway Age applauds the proceeding. The editor of The Railway Age is terri¬ bly iri earnest. He wants the farmer to comprehend fully how great nn ass he is, and bow that lie, the editor, can roe cue him from browsing around on them bushes and thistles, with his tail full of burs, and lead him where clover and bluegraxs is knee deep. He says: To hate the .1. male-gw. the I'.-fferH and Campbellsen<l Imunellys- Is i.Miloowwrasor tooppoutlie farminir commually. A certain #octF.i, of that community. It I# true, hassof f crw i itwlf to liebciruili*! an.l l# f.#,lwl fiy tin** oolny nentUsmen. lint that wctlon,compare*! „|o**|y small and'iueom* atatea at lrn.it, and wn tmlw .| |„ all) Lave been habitually over teiimatH. Tho farmers of tho United States con kro { gy ea ter interests than railroad cor¬ {(orations. They know when they nn twindh 1, and in ch.josing representa¬ tive* tiny are quite as competent an proprietors of Tho Railway Ago aro to choose editors, and such representatives Will not suffer when compared with tho men who malign them, nor ts the inalig nity of the attack condoned by the flatu lent complimentary platitude* about fvm3 nor tb „ foBowiag: it l* Wl. u. u.!k of the interests at the rail •rmyii and tb* farmer# tut Udn* an!«c>nMir:. It ia Hl« to talk of th« rail my f.,r their own r-dlHrat M orrayln* Ih-m—lves ac ■ • i i|. # K -, toral cla»-e#. Tlroyore dTOJisr"* only * few praUfemm farra* who vo. tool harmful to th- r# thou *»« to the railway eraphryee. These e-utli whom Mr. 8u-a.Ir.mi. wHewta# »e d h» *oek# and #mall .inderetawtliut" <»" wl«h kat isM “until iwInvkiUiliwTsR l#—.me hurileb on the proopertty at tho laa<!. alwl lu worklait to defeat ttrui a# the railway * li— ployete of tow* reeeatly defe*»*4 <'ampin tt tha Muploye*:-. o-iyjht«-»h«v« th- sympathy all the newspapers «f U» coantry, of all boro -t poHUrtans of D>th parthsa, of all wasp worker#, of ail Lat in—*• rneu. SU'1. not least, ti a farmer# then •wives. Everyirxly uudcr-taitol* that tho tntereeta of rai!r>rarl# and the are not antagonistic. In all tho transactions of life where {.rolritjr ernathe term antag'inisUo L# not ble. even in lending an i Drrrowing tn ter-rV may D? arcl often am mutual! to only when HLyhckism hi ttaffaf" b*Sih*. NO. 40 have proceeded upon tue idea that they have chartered rights to collect divi¬ dends on water, on fraud, to do which ts a monstrous outrage. The farmers 3» not want to pay that sort of tribute, and railroad emptbyees should resolve that they will not help on the astounding in¬ iquity. The talk about railroads de¬ veloping the country, as an excuse for fraud, is alarmingly vicious, and those who engage in it are aiders and abettors of a species of scoundrclism which all holiest men condemn.—Locomotive Firs* . wen's Ma gazine. .fj/'ETB. AND PUR B UNADULTEUA TED MEA.VKSS, Attempts to Stop tho Publication of the Advocate, flut, Only Succeed In Retarding It for About Five Hours. We regret the fact, but we are t-empellsd in justice hr the cause as well as to our¬ selves to dpal it: personalities iu tho exp¬ lanation of the above beading. In Urn later part of last January wo sub. leased the /’duple’s Advocate to Mr T A llonne. At that time we kurw of Mr Home only as as a good ’ Typo” aud that was wind the paper U"it.led th eu. Mr I.inmu ran the Advocate ns manager for ub iut two months, ami several days af ter the lust weeks issue, which was the Cr#t oiio issued iu Urawfordville. When the puper iiinved to Craivfoidville we again resumed editorial charge, and Mr Bound con Crated to run tho paper as manager. Two weeks went by and tho said manager bad mil complied with the impnitaut stipulations of the c mint. We reminded him of the fact, and that it was evident to all if he pursued Ins present course the paper would be wrecked. ,Whereupon he got very wratliy aud with a large Buoday .School ex pres nun declared his intention of itroping tho paper if we expected the contract fultiiled. Be said that we cer tiiluly did expect lira contract carriedtmt, that it wus a fair aud reasonable trade and lie bad signed the saute. To be brief Le^ubuiit the matter ft ended ** l'»P« •»>- ■ under otir charge. m*.«. *■> - * ’ /*■ % m from pure nuaiinl United t’tr, the Mid BoOuc de voted hie tiuro and rfloi .tempting to stop the publication When ii detarmirndjon evil’they' generally flml Nnie M)rt f „ which to begin t Hr dev|||| e||la The of Mr. Boom* , xt was absurdity hu, served hii it a# « cause i*,^ hti.vitim, .ml as staled at first dclayo.1 f,„ ri/]W wotk on the Advocate und^Cu».:,l >, V fico door by the iiiaudate,.if ( l.ai. Here Is.thcjmru of tint whole matter Mr. Boone had hired .a hoy printiX when' he leased the Advocate in Greeneshoro. This boy who came witb the Paper wotked two mouths for J/r. Boone but received ito pay from him. With this fact, which was a fault of his own, Boone (ought to stop.lhe publication ofj the paper. He told the boy that he could not pay him, anil fooled him into believing that lio (tho boyj could make tiro press pay for it by taking out a laborers !ien>g»inst it. Air, Itooiie got the boy into his own, and into a lawyers presence and they asked him if ho wsntol his money. Naturally he replied that did. He was told by the lawyer:Air Jno. Hickson; that he could get it by taking out a lien against the press; and all he would have to do would ls» to sign a paper. Hr signed it, we be¬ lieve os he claims, without knowing what the couHebtieiicf* would Ire. The levy was made, but the design to close the Advo -cate's iloot for good was twbarted; for ihe press was within a few hours after the levy, from withuuder tire bailiff's bon ds aud work going ou as usual. Acting on the ad vie of onr legal adviser we got tiro hoy to drop the case. This was done by showing him that it would ho impossible for him to get the money T A Boon* owed him by pursu -ing the course he was against the paper, that if ho still held to the case he would be knocked out of a job. and in various ,, tbtr wayM J be w .,. lId harmeil by J ,. 0 , d -ii«^ q lielwy tn-Athe advice and dropped »* he case. The only thing unsettled then was the fee the Dry owed his lawyer. Tiro lawyer agr«ed to wait on tha boy for I Ice and as Hated previously Ihe door of I the office war. i.{#-ue<i ... oii'l work again re* j j st ,i,.r.i So T. A. Boone was completely foiled p m-en little and underhanded at ■ tempt to kt the (niblicali ... . •»» of ....... the AJ*e- _ qt ^ ;1Ild p, »i«D th-: firt ta on irAtc A he ; n ” rjmm j«t'j a 'UU 44 f tcvuld wA pay hiuttelf. And to lurtoer show the venom of bis batre-l to trial to {atSUKls the only re -mai! ing printer to isave at th* ean e time with hmuelf But in ti*is, we ere’glnd “f U-agalu . . -d.